Back

Estimating Lifetime Periodontal Burden Under Informative Tooth Loss

McCormick, K. M.; Amarasena, N.; Guzzo, G.

2026-05-30 dentistry and oral medicine
10.64898/2026.05.27.26354300 medRxiv
Show abstract

Background: Periodontitis is defined by cumulative, irreversible tissue destruction, yet population-based measurement typically relies on cross-sectional indicators derived from retained teeth. Destruction that occurred earlier in life, particularly disease severe enough to result in tooth loss, is structurally excluded from these measures, potentially leading to systematic underestimation of lifetime periodontal burden. Objective: To develop and evaluate a measurement framework that estimates lifetime periodontal burden from cross-sectional data by explicitly incorporating informative tooth loss under etiological uncertainty. Methods: Data were drawn from 10,324 adults aged [≥]30 years participating in the 20090-2016 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) who completed full-mouth periodontal examination and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) testing. Lifetime periodontal burden was estimated by combining observed clinical attachment loss in retained teeth with probabilistic contributions from missing teeth, using three alternative age-stratified attribution schedules derived from epidemiological studies of periodontal extraction. Performance was compared with conventional measures of periodontal severity and extent using distributional analyses, correlations with HbA1c, discrimination of diabetes status, and relative importance analysis. Age-adjusted models were treated as sensitivity analyses. Results: Estimated lifetime periodontal burden exhibited strong, monotonic age gradients across glycemic categories, in contrast to more attenuated patterns observed for severity and extent. Across attribution schedules, lifetime burden showed stronger correlations with HbA1c ({rho} = 0.30-0.32) than conventional measures. In multivariable models including all indices, lifetime burden retained an independent association with HbA1c, whereas severity and extent contributed little unique information. Discriminative performance for diabetes status was consistently higher for lifetime burden than for conventional measures and remained stable across attribution schedules. Conclusions: Lifetime periodontal burden can be estimated from cross-sectional data by explicitly modelling informative tooth loss rather than restricting measurement to retained teeth. Incorporating historical tissue loss under uncertainty yields a more coherent representation of cumulative periodontal destruction than snapshot-based measures and provides a methodological basis for life-course-oriented periodontal epidemiology.

Matching journals

The top 6 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.

1
Journal of Dental Research
13 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
18.0%
2
Royal Society Open Science
193 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
8.7%
3
Scientific Reports
3102 papers in training set
Top 13%
7.0%
4
PLOS ONE
4510 papers in training set
Top 24%
7.0%
5
eLife
5422 papers in training set
Top 12%
6.5%
6
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
2130 papers in training set
Top 13%
5.0%
50% of probability mass above
7
Nature Communications
4913 papers in training set
Top 44%
2.8%
8
Journal of Clinical Medicine
91 papers in training set
Top 2%
2.7%
9
Frontiers in Immunology
586 papers in training set
Top 3%
1.9%
10
Frontiers in Medicine
113 papers in training set
Top 3%
1.8%
11
American Journal of Epidemiology
57 papers in training set
Top 0.7%
1.7%
12
Biomolecules
95 papers in training set
Top 0.4%
1.7%
13
Journal of The Royal Society Interface
189 papers in training set
Top 2%
1.7%
14
Infection
15 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
1.5%
15
Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology
98 papers in training set
Top 3%
1.5%
16
JNCI Cancer Spectrum
10 papers in training set
Top 0.3%
1.4%
17
BMC Public Health
147 papers in training set
Top 4%
1.3%
18
Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
216 papers in training set
Top 6%
1.3%
19
The ISME Journal
194 papers in training set
Top 2%
1.3%
20
Human Molecular Genetics
130 papers in training set
Top 2%
1.0%
21
Science Translational Medicine
111 papers in training set
Top 5%
0.8%
22
Frontiers in Public Health
140 papers in training set
Top 7%
0.8%
23
Epidemics
104 papers in training set
Top 2%
0.8%
24
Journal of Medical Microbiology
20 papers in training set
Top 0.6%
0.8%
25
PLOS Computational Biology
1633 papers in training set
Top 25%
0.7%
26
International Journal of Epidemiology
74 papers in training set
Top 3%
0.7%
27
Vaccine
189 papers in training set
Top 2%
0.7%
28
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
182 papers in training set
Top 6%
0.5%
29
Science Advances
1098 papers in training set
Top 34%
0.5%
30
Methods in Ecology and Evolution
160 papers in training set
Top 3%
0.5%